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Here we go again, folks. The United States has done it again… we roll out the red carpet, train the best and brightest, and act shocked and heartbroken when those same people pack up their American “know-how” bags and hand them over to a foreign rival. A tale as old as time.

This sad fairytale is about Dr. Luo Weiwei, a former NASA scientist who spent 15-long years working in US aerospace technology before heading back to her home base of China. Now she’s the brains behind “Innoscience,” a semiconductor powerhouse that’s giving China a massive leg up in the tech race, a race that’s about power, money, and global dominance.

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And here’s what makes this sting even more painful: our politicians, yes, even President Trump, still don’t seem to grasp the pattern here. Recently, Revolver published a piece on this very topic, asking President Trump to reconsider his stance on inviting in 600K Chinese nationals.

Revolver:

President Trump has done a lot of good for this country, but on this issue, he needs to do better. There is nothing “America First” about flooding our universities with 600,000 students from Communist China while American kids are left drowning in debt, rejected from programs, or locked out of opportunities altogether.

How can we claim to be serious about stopping the illegal invasion, ending DEI corruption, and cleaning up the H-1B scam while we keep letting this happen?

Adam Johnston:

No serious nation would allow another 600,000 students from their foremost geopolitical adversary.

For decades, the majority of international students in the U.S. have come from China and India.

There are almost 300K Chinese nationals enrolled in American universities.

Enough

Are these students or Chinese spies? The pattern we’re seeing unfold would suggest spies.

Watch:

This is an important piece. You can read the entire article here:

Mr. President: We appreciate you, but please do better on this issue…

So, everybody talks tough about trade and about China stealing our intellectual property every chance they get, but then our leaders keep inviting in more foreign “talent” into the country with zero safeguards in place.

Meanwhile, China just keeps scooping up the benefits of our openness and generosity and laughing all the way to the bank.

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While the US claims it’s cutting ties with China on high-tech chips, a company built by this NASA-trained scientist is now sitting pretty in the supply chain of one of America’s biggest AI giants.

South China Morning Post:

At a time when the United States is decoupling from China on cutting-edge chip technology, Nvidia has unveiled its list of suppliers for the advanced 800 VDC power architecture powering next-generation AI data centres. Among American and European giants was an unexpected name: Innoscience, a Chinese company specialising in gallium nitride (GaN) technology.

Innoscience marks China’s growing clout in the high-stakes semiconductor race, and behind the company’s rapid rise is Luo Weiwei, a former Nasa scientist who spent 15 years advancing aerospace technologies in the US before returning to China. Luo founded Innoscience in 2015, betting big on GaN – a material poised to redefine efficiency in power electronics. In less than six years, her company became the world’s first to mass-produce 8-inch silicon-based GaN wafers, leapfrogging industry norms and positioning China at the forefront of third-generation semiconductor technology.

Now headquartered in Suzhou and publicly listed in Hong Kong, Innoscience is not only the largest dedicated GaN manufacturer globally but also a strategic asset in China’s quest for technological self-reliance. With a 29.9 per cent share of the 2024 global GaN power device market and a production capacity racing towards 70,000 wafers per month, the company is fuelling everything from fast chargers to AI data centres and defence systems.

This isn’t just China playing “catch up.” This is China doing what they do best: leapfrogging and using talent we trained. And let’s not ignore the giant elephant in the room… this scientist had access to a lot of highly sensitive information. Again, “student” or “spy”? This is the million-dollar question.

Now China’s not just competing; they’re embedded in the supply chains that power our AI future and our defense systems. That’s heavy. It’s not just embarrassing… it’s dangerous.

The South China Morning Post piece goes on:

Luo Weiwei, the once low-key scientist, has quietly become one of China’s most powerful players in the battle for semiconductor supremacy. GaN is a third-generation semiconductor material offering advantages such as higher energy efficiency and reduced size compared with traditional silicon-based chips.

It is widely used in devices such as chargers, 5G base stations, radar systems, military communications and aerospace applications. According to Innoscience’s website, the company is involved in the design, development and production of various types of GaN products, including integrated circuits, wafers and modules, serving applications across multiple sectors such as consumer electronics, LED lighting, data centres and new energy vehicles. Information about her childhood and early education is limited.

But according to a report on Tuesday by the Chinese new media platform QbitAI, Luo was born in 1970 and is said to have ancestral roots in Zhuji, Zhejiang province.

And here’s where it gets even more infuriating. Not only is China winning the talent war, but with our help, they’ve cornered the resources that make this technology possible.

The South China Morning Post piece wraps up:

Backed by a good team, substantial government and private investment and a comprehensive local supply chain, Innoscience achieved a technological leap in under six years and began mass producing gallium-nitride-on-silicon (GaN-on-Si) power chips in 2021.

The company’s success also rested on China’s dominance of gallium. China produces 98 per cent of the world’s gallium and has banned its export to the US, making it more difficult and costly for the Pentagon to acquire GaN-based chips. However, cross-border commercial disputes and geopolitical tensions between China and the US also cloud the prospects of the Chinese chipmaker, as Washington is pushing hard to constrain China’s chip development.

So, here’s the quick, down-and-dirty sum-up:China produces 98 percent of the world’s gallium, bans exports to the US, and now has American-trained experts building chips that we’re scrambling to buy back at a premium… if we can even get them.

Meanwhile, the Pentagon is left scrambling for alternatives. It’s not just a tech race at this point; it’s a national security crisis.

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Until our leaders, yes, even the ones we trust to be “tough on China,” wake up and put real safety measures in place, this cycle will keep happening over and over. And every time it does, we lose another piece of our technological edge, our economic strength, and our national security.


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